Humans
Photographs and stories of extraordinary people around the globe
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- 12,99 €
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- 12,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
‘One of the most influential art projects of the decade' – The Washington Post
Humans of New York goes global.
Brandon Stanton, acclaimed street photographer and creator of the New York Times bestseller Humans of New York, shifts his focus from the streets of the Big Apple to the world beyond.
Join him as he journeys across the globe from London, Paris and Rome to Iraq, Ukraine, Uganda, Vietnam and places in between. Meet ordinary, yet extraordinary humans from all corners of the world, and learn their life stories through beautiful photography and accompanying interviews.
With tales of love and loss, strength and failure, Humans chronicles the full range of human emotion. An antidote to a society preoccupied with erecting rather than dismantling borders, it shows us the entire world, one story at a time . . .
A stunning full colour book with hundreds of photos, stories and personal essays from over forty countries, Humans is a must for global citizens everywhere.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Stanton (Humans of New York) composes a beautiful love letter to humanity in this moving compilation of his work. Hundreds of portraits from around the world are accompanied by poignant quotes from each subject in his signature style, and interspersed with the photos are fascinating details about Stanton's process, like his standard first interview question: "What's your greatest struggle right now?" The subjects' responses span topics including death, raising kids, and addiction, imbuing the candid images with lifetimes worth of meaning and memory. One subject playing piano on a street in Montreal says, "You could make a horror movie about my life," then recounts years of familial abuse and shocking violence. Children offer a lighter reprieve, with a tie-wearing kid in New York who says the hardest part of first grade is "eleven plus eleven." First-world problems, like a man in a Tokyo intersection who needs more YouTube followers, contrast with recollections of the Rwandan genocide from a woman in Butare, Rwanda. Stanton's skill at putting people at ease comes through in the spontaneity of the images, as well as in the stories they share with him. It's an outstanding survey, and each new image reveals something unique about the human condition. Correction: An earlier version of this review incorrectly noted the images in the book are black and white.